Java ObjectOutputStream reset error

I think you're misunderstanding what
reset() does. It resets the stream to
disregard any object instances previously written
to it. This is pretty clearly not what you want in
your case, since you're sending an object to the
stream and then resetting straight away, which is
pointless.

It looks like all you need is a
flush(); if that's insufficient then
the problem is on the receiving side.

I had a similar problem. The way that worked for me was to check for
EOF first and then raise a ConnectionError exception if true. So for
your code I would add the following:
while True:
try:
if client_reader.at_eof():
raise ConnectionError
data = (yield from asyncio.wait_for(client_reader.readline(),
timeout=1.0))
i

You can simply remove extremes from axis. In general, I would suggest
using axis.setExtremes(min, max) instead of axis.update(options).
setExtremes should have much better performance in compare to update.
Code:
$('#setDefault').click(function (ev) {
$('[data-chart]').each(function (item) {
$(this).highcharts().yAxis[0].setExtremes(null, null);
});
});
And demo: http://jsfiddle

You wanted to clear an input when user click the <td>?
You can just add a function like this:
function clear(ID)
{
document.getElementById(ID).value = "";
}
Then change your onclick event in <td> like this:
onclick='clear("txt")'
So it'll set the value of #txt to empty.
EDIT: Didn't see your edit while I typing this answer,
I suggest that you can open the javascript cons

As far as I know, they are doing totally different thing.
git revert aimed to revert effects of previous commit. For example,
A <- B <- C
^ HEAD
If I found B I committed before is wrong, and I want to "undo" its
change, git-revert-ing B will cause:
A <- B <- C <- B'
^ HEAD
for which B' is reversing the change done in B.
git reset is more straight-